Description
This Seminar proposes new etymological reconstructions for some possible Minoan place names according to an Indo-European key of interpretation. Minoan is an unknown language 'hidden' behind the undeciphered Linear A writing system, used in Crete during the Bronze Age and witnessed by archaeological findings (mainly clay tablets inscribed with this script) from the beginning of last century. Linear B, the 'sister syllabic writing system' of Linear A, was deciphered by Michael Ventris (with the cooperation of John Chadwick) in 1952, and was found to transcribe Mycenaean Greek. However, despite Linear A being considered the writing system from which Linear B grammatologically derives, it is still undeciphered and has, so far, resisted all attempts of interpretation. This Seminar outlines the application of an experimental phonetic transcription methodology to clusters of symbols in Linear A. Findings from this method seem to show that some segments of characters could be interpreted as probable place names. The etymological reconstruction also seems to show that all the Minoan place names so far hypothesized can be explained according to an Indo-European historical-phonetic criterion. If confirmed, this could be a significant breakthrough in the study of the Minoan civilization and of its origins. The lack of knowledge of the Minoan language and the apparent impenetrability of the Linear A script, indeed, have prevented, so far, scholars from establishing if the Minoans were (among all the possible options) Indo-European or Semitic or Afro-Asiatic people. The Indo-European reconstruction of place names in the Linear A tablets could shed new light on the general interpretation of the Minoan civilization and open a debate on the origins of the Minoan civilization itself. The Talk is given in the context of the LMS TGIF Research Seminars' Series at the Linguistics and Multilingual Studies Programme (LMS), School of Humanities (SoH), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore.Period | 8 Oct 2021 |
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Held at | Nanyang Technological University, Singapore |
Degree of Recognition | National |
Keywords
- Linear A
- Minoan Language
- Indo-European
- Language Deciphering
- Toponymy
Documents & Links
Related content
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Research output
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Linear A Corpus
Research output: Other contribution › peer-review
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Linear A and Minoan: Some New Old Questions
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Coding to Decipher Linear A
Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceeding › Conference Proceeding › peer-review
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Indo-European Toponymy in Minoan Crete: An Etymological Approach
Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceeding › Conference Proceeding › peer-review
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A New Approach to the Decipherment of Linear A, Stage 2: Cryptanalysis and Language Deciphering: A 'Brute Force Attack' on an Undeciphered Writing System
Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceeding › Conference Proceeding › peer-review
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Linear A Libation Tables: A Semitic Connection Explored
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Linear A and 'The Machine': A 'Brute Force Attack' to Decrypt the Minoan Code
Research output: Other contribution › peer-review
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Glyph-Breakers at Work: The Decipherment of Linear A
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
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Minoan Cryptanalysis: Computational Approaches to Deciphering Linear A and Assessing Its Connections with Language Families from the Mediterranean and the Black Sea Areas
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Re-print - Minoan Cryptanalysis: Computational Approaches to Deciphering Linear A and Assessing Its Connections with Language Families from the Mediterranean and the Black Sea Areas
Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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Activities
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Giving Voice to the Minoan People: The Decipherment of Linear A
Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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The Linear A Digital Corpus: Digital Humanities and Language Decipherment
Activity: Talk or presentation › Presentation at conference/workshop/seminar
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Minoan Place Names: The Enigma of Unknown Origins
Activity: Talk or presentation › Presentation at conference/workshop/seminar
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Projects
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Giving Voice to the Minoan People: The Decipherment of Linear A
Project: Internal Research Project